So, desirable though some of Gore's proposals may be ( such as breaking up impersonally large public schools into smaller units ), they are not enough.
22.
Had those wars been fought more impersonally, in the high-tech American way, the U . S . reaction to all the carnage would perhaps be less horrified.
23.
With disarming paradox, the impulsive, athletic smears and spatterings of the 1950s are here impersonally hardened and industrialized by being seen through Lichtenstein's lens of commercial imagery.
24.
While no one misses the mobsters who once ruled the Strip or the porno lords of Times Square, the corporations that have replaced such sleazy entrepreneurs are impersonally multinational, not idiosyncratically indigenous.
25.
As Stout writes of Falwell's spiritual ancestors : " Instead of seeing the Indians as national rivals, Puritan writers portrayed them impersonally as God's instrument of correction ."
26.
By using deliberately banal photographs, impersonally mimicked, he was doing the exact opposite of what painting was expected to do, not grabbing a viewer by the lapels but methodically copying an everyday image.
27.
At that price, many consumers might decide that even the most personal purchases can be made . . . impersonally . ( EDITOR'S NOTE : Anna Holmes is a New York City writer .)
28.
:: : You might propose to the Wikipedia : Welcoming committee that the bot randomly assign ( willing ) members of that committee as points of contact so new users aren't being impersonally greeted.
29.
There was nothing innocent about the way each item was impersonally itemized and described : " Backstreet Boys ( CD ) by Backstreet Boys, in stock, add comment, $ 12.99 ."
30.
If you are using possessive apostrophes, possibly you are not writing impersonally, as is appropriate for a lab report-- 124.243.155.3 10 : 15, 23 October 2006 ( UTC)